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The Ruble: A Political History

Autor Ekaterina Pravilova
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 27 iun 2023
A groundbreaking history of Russia, from empire to the Soviet era, viewed through the lens of its money.Money seems passive, a silent witness to the deeds and misdeeds of its holders, but through its history intimate dramas and grand historical processes can be told. So argues this sweeping narrative of the ruble's story from the time of Catherine the Great to Lenin. The Russian ruble did not enjoy a particularly reputable place among European currencies. Across two hundred years, long periods of financial turmoil were followed by energetic and pragmatic reforms that invariably ended with another collapse. Why did a country with an industrializing economy, solid private property rights, and (until 1918) a near perfect reputation as a rock-solid repayer of its debts stick for such a prolonged period with an inconvertible currency? Why did the Russian gold standard differ from the European model? In answering these questions, Ekaterina Pravilova argues that politics and culture must be considered alongside economic factors. The history of the Russian ruble offers an opportunity to explore the political reasons behind the preservation of a supposedly backward financial system and to show how politicians used monetary reforms to block or enact political transformations.The Ruble is a history of Russia written in the language of money. It shows how economists, landowners, merchants, and peasants understood, perceived, and used financial mechanisms. In her definitive account, Pravilova interprets the well-known political events of the eighteenth to early twentieth centuries--wars, attempts at constitutional transformations, revolutions--through the ideas and politics of currency reforms and offers a new history of Russia's imperial expansion and collapse.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780197663714
ISBN-10: 0197663710
Pagini: 560
Ilustrații: 25 black and white illustrations
Dimensiuni: 235 x 165 x 38 mm
Greutate: 0.95 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States

Recenzii

Pravilova has carried out prodigious archival research.
Groundbreaking history of Russia - from empire to the Soviet era - viewed through the lens of its money. Important and timely in the face of recent events.
This wonderfully intelligent, knowledgeable, and imaginative book on the ruble and financial policy fills an immense gap in our understanding of government, politics, and society in imperial Russia.
The Ruble: A Political History is a magisterial account of the Russian currency as a tool of autocratic control—from Catherine the Great to the early Soviet times. Today, when the Russian imperialism is back and when Russian ruble is once again returning to nonconvertibility, Ekaterina Pravilova's book is more timely than ever.
Award-winning author Ekaterina Pravilova asks, 'Can money have a story?' As regards the Russian imperial ruble from the eighteenth to the early twentieth century, she shows that most certainly it can—and what a story it can tell about a country, an economy, and a society! Her deeply researched and sharply argued book demonstrates how repeated Russian governments deployed currency and financial resources as a tool of domestic rule and geopolitical competition. Yet her work also elucidates unexpected and important currents of both liberal and conservative thought not visible in other accounts. A valuable and important account for historians of Russian imperial history, broader European history, and economic history.
...original, fascinating and meticulously researched.
Ekaterina Pravilova's book displays admirable imagination and originality - as well as obvious, and dire, relevance to Russia's here and now.
The Ruble: A Political History is an impressive accomplishment.
Ekaterina Pravilova's The Ruble: A Political History persuasively offers Russia's currency as a case study in the entanglement of money and power, and in so doing, encourages us to understand what catalyzes these global trends. A 200-year 'biography of a currency,' the book positions the ruble as both an important part of imperial organization and an unexpected anchor of Soviet influence. The ruble also emerges, amid political and financial crisis, as a potential instrument of Russian democracy-yet its history ultimately demonstrates how a currency can become a primary tool for creating and maintaining an autocracy.
The Ruble is a masterful achievement and an indispensable reading not only for anyone interested in Russia and its empire ... but to anyone looking for comparative, long-term historical accounts of monetary ideologies, practices and policies.
A trailblazing work... Readers will be enthralled by Pravilova's seamless incorporation of political and cultural factors to give new meaning to this time period.
Pravilova's new book serves as a magisterial example of how political, cultural, and economic history can inform one another. It also serves as a much needed crash course for understanding the imperial ambitions of the Russian state.
A satisfactory discussion of the ruble in Central Asia and the Russian Far East. Recommended.
Pravilova's book is a financial history of its own kind: on the one hand, it is a financial history of Russia, which describes fundamental developments in Russian monetary policy and their effects. On the other hand, it is the history of political ideas that were associated with the currency. Here, the ruble proves to be a floating signifier: it stood for the power of the autocracy, for Russia's geopolitical position, for the unity of the Russian people, or even for their otherness...The book thus provides information on many detailed questions of Russian history from a new perspective.
The Ruble provides an original perspective on Russian history with fascinating insights into the nexus of power and money. It has many great stories. These qualities should guarantee it a place on the scholar's bookshelf.

Notă biografică

Ekaterina Pravilova is Rosengarten Professor of Modern and Contemporary History and Director of the Program in Russian, East European, and Eurasian Studies at Princeton University. She is the author of the award-winning A Public Empire: Property and the Quest for the Common Good in Imperial Russia, as well as Legality and Individual Rights: Administrative Justice in Russia and Finances of Empire: Money and Power in Russian Policy in the Imperial Borderlands, published in Russian. She is a native of St. Petersburg.